The Huntley Farmside |
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VOL<UM£ 2 — XUBfBER S4 THURSDAY, NOV. 28, l«ei phom:: HUNTLEY M21 (any time) (If no anwser) 81Bi^590W8 '^' HUNTLEY '3^<^'^« 6 PAGES MAILED AND DISTRIBUTED WEEKLY 5c Per Oa^ Grrade School Winter Concert By ROGER A. PERLEY The Annual Grade School Win¬ ter Concert will be November 30, 1961, 8:15 P.M., at the Huntley Consolidated Schools Gym , Hunt¬ ley, Illinois. The program will be opened by the 49 voiced Mixed Seventh Grade Chorus; they will sing: "Silent Night", by Gruber; "The Old Gray Mare", arranged by I. Cooper; "LuUy, TTiou Uttle Tiny Child", the Coventry Carol; and "Deck The Halls", an Old Welsh Carol. The second part of the program will be presented by the 42 voiced Mixed Eighth Grade Chorus; they will sing: "C<wne Thou Almighty King, arranged by I. Cooper; "Goin To Shout", a Negro Spiritual; "Alouette", an Old French Carol; and "The Little Drummer Boy", by K. Davis, H. Onorati, and H. Simeone Following an intermission, the twenty-two piece grade five Begin¬ ners Band wil play a selection, "German Waltz", by arranged by M D. Taylor. "iTie last portion of the program will be presented by the twenty two piece grades six and seven Cadet Band; they will play: "Young (Continued on Page 2) WINTER CONCERT 1st. Basketl>all Grame Box Scores HUNTLEY 60 Lary Kahl—6 fg, 2 pf Gary Borhart— Jim Stading—2 fg, 2 pf L Jordi—2 fg Terry Henning—5 fg, 3 ft 3 pf Don Olson— Dave Frohling- -11 fg, 4 ft, 2 pf H. Swanson— Richard Zimmerman—1 ft, 4 pf Doug Swanson—3 pf RICHMOND 32 Gwizpala—6 fg, 5 pf Harsha— SwaltUoff—1 ft Gardner—1 fg, 1 pf Popenhagen—1 ft Metz—1 pf Stienke—2 fg, 1 pf May— Coleman—1 pf Zarnstorff—2 fg, 2 ft Lindblom—1 fg, 1 ft, 4 pf Lay—1 fg, 2 pf Johnson— fg—field goal pf—personal foul ft—free throw Junior Varsity score Huntloy 45 -- Richmond 28 Huntley Lions Meeting By ROGER A. PERLEY Fourteen Lion members were present at the first of two month¬ ly meetings of the month of No¬ vember, November 14, 1961. A fine dinner was served by the Jr. American Legion Auxiliary, and prepared by the American Legion Auxiliary. Lion Eichler, of Dun¬ dee, the Deputy District Govener, was a dinner guest. The Lions and Lionesses will have their Christmas Dinner at the Virginian on December 5, 1961, 8:00 P.M. A one dollar gift ex¬ change will be present. Lion Delaney gave a report con¬ cerning the new Grade School Basketball uniforms Lion Weber presented a sum¬ mary report, which Lion Marlowe read, concerning the recent Trap Shoot and Gun Prizes The Bloomingdale Lions Club will have a Charter Night Dinner on November 18, 1961, at St. An¬ drews Country Club; Lions find Lionesses Thurow and Ortlib will represent the Huntley Lions Club. The coming Grade School Christmas Program was discussed; the prograh has been schceduled for December 20, 1961. November 28, 1961, the District Continued on pa^e 2 LIONS CLUB aoc: ax: =Kzr ¦¦g. J^ sw ^g- ax: ^^ ^ag -^g- —j^ Yarsity fiasketltaH Team Junior Varsity Basketball Team F.F.A. Annual Slave Sale Friday "Ilie Huntley chapter of the F. F A. is holding their annual slave sale this Friday, November 24, at the Huntley Community Hig^ School at 8 P M This sale as in years past is sponsored by the committee for agricultural education in Huntley. Howard Ruth will again be auctioneer. FYoceeds will go for agricultural scholarships and agrictiltural edu¬ cation's needs. This year Howard and some lo¬ cal men and officials will present a skit to ad to the enjoyment. De¬ tails are not available at this time s*>, "If you want to see it," says agricultural advisor Don Barrett, "Come out to the sale." Thirty-two members and one agricultural advisor will be auc¬ tioned off to work for business¬ men, residents, and families of Huntley and the surrounding area on Saturday the 25th of Novem¬ ber, or on another Saturday whi"h will be arranged by the purchas¬ er and the "slave". This year the committee xjid not solicit donations from the local merchants. However, if merchants SLAVE SALE Continued on page 2 HigK Sckool Pep Band By ROGER A. PERLEY The Huntley High School Senior Band of 36 players have started their basketball game playing with the opening of the first home bas¬ ketball game held last Friday, No¬ vember 17, 1961. This year the band has been hit quite hard of having players missing from the organization due to cheerleading and basketball reasons; the band is missing two girls for the JV game due to cheerleading, and then three girls are absent for the Varsity game due to cheerleading. The JV team claims six male mem¬ bers for the first game; while the Varsity team claims 4 band mem¬ bers for the second game. And of course, sickness often claims one or two persons per game. The worst "hit" section is that of the trumpets, or comets, three are participating in game activities. But the band will appear at home games in as great a strength as possible The band members have decided NOT to organize a Pep Band for out-of-town games; the most prob¬ able reason for not organizing the Pep Band is that out of 9 away- from-home games during the 1%0- 1%1 year, the band was allowed to appear at only two schools, Malta and Kirkland From the conception of the Pep Band we have been denied participating in more and more schools . . . maybe due to the fact that our group always appears, looking nice, and does a fine Job of playing HAIT¥ IHAIfKSGXVXNO NOTICE There will be a cub scout meet¬ ing in the upstairs of the Village Hall Wednesday, Novenber 29, at 7:oO p.m. All interested parents, please attend. National Fd. Develop. Tests Tests to provide Huntley High School's ninth graders with infor¬ mation needed to make better de¬ cisions about high school, college, and careers will be given next spring, according to Mr. Barrett. He said the battery of exams, known as the National Education Development Tests, will be admin-, istered on Tuesday, March 6, 1962 The NEDT battery, he pointed out, measures each student's abili¬ ty to apply basic learning skills rather than an ability to memorize particular facts or specific subject matter. Consequently, the principal not¬ ed, the tests halp educators identi¬ fy educational strengtns and weak¬ nesses, and help students and par¬ ents make a realistic appraisal of educational and vocational objec¬ tives. In 1961 more than 366,000 stu¬ dents in 4,972 of the nation's pub¬ lic, private, and parochial high schools took the tests constructed by Dr. E. F. Lindquist, author of the Iowa Tests of Educational De¬ velopment Prepared and administered by Science Research Associates, a Chicago-based firm serving educa¬ tion, industry, and government through applied behavioral scien¬ ces, the annual three-hour NEDT yields scores in English, social studies, mathematics, natural sci¬ ences, and word usage. Students who take the tests re¬ ceive score reports which they can record in a Student Profile Leaf¬ let. Each profile indicates how the student compares with thousands of other pupils at his grade level across the country. In addition, each student's prin¬ cipal and counselor are provided with booklets useful in assisting pupils and their parents to inter¬ pret the meaning of the test scores
Object Description
Title | The Huntley Farmside |
Date | 1961-11-23 |
Month | 11 |
Day | 23 |
Year | 1961 |
Volume | 2 |
Issue | 34 |
Decade | 1960-1969 |
Creator | The Huntley Farmside |
Coverage | Huntley, Illinois, United States |
Description | Weekly Newspaper from the Huntley Area Public Library Collection |
Subject | Newspaper Archives |
Rights | This material may be protected by U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17 U.S. Code). |
Publisher | This Collection was digitized and loaded into CONTENTdm by OCLC Preservation Service Center (Bethlehem, PA) for the Huntley Area Public Library |
Source | Reproduction of library's print newspaper archives |
Contributing Institution | Huntley Area Public Library |
Language | ENG |
Collection Name | Huntley Area Newspapers |
Description
Title | The Huntley Farmside |
Date | 1961-11-23 |
Month | 11 |
Day | 23 |
Year | 1961 |
Volume | 2 |
Issue | 34 |
Decade | 1960-1969 |
Sequence | 1 |
Page | 1 |
Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archival Image is a 1-bit bitonal tiff that was direct scanned from original material at 300 dpi. The original file size was 202 kilobytes. |
FileName | 19611123_001.tif |
Creator | The Huntley Farmside |
Date Digital | 2007-05-07 |
Coverage | Huntley, Illinois, United States |
Description | Weekly Newspaper from the Huntley Area Public Library Collection |
Subject | Newspaper Archives |
Rights | This material may be protected by U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17 U.S. Code). |
Publisher | This Collection was digitized and loaded into CONTENTdm by OCLC Preservation Service Center (Bethlehem, PA) for the Huntley Area Public Library |
Source | Reproduction of library's print newspaper archives |
Contributing Institution | Huntley Area Public Library |
Language | ENG |
FullText |
VOL |
Collection Name | Huntley Area Newspapers |